The
National Association of Homebuilders (NAHB) announced on Tuesday its housing
market index (HMI) stood at 75 in August, down from 80 in July. This was the
lowest reading since July 2020.
Economists
had forecast the HMI to remain unchanged at 80.
A
reading over 50 indicates more builders view conditions as good than poor.
Two
of three HMI components recorded declines this month. The indicator gauging current sales
conditions fell 5 points to 81 and the component measuring traffic of
prospective buyers also dropped 5 points to 60. Meanwhile, the measure charting
sales expectations in the next six held steady at 81.
NAHB
Chairman Chuck Fowke noted: “Buyer traffic has fallen to its lowest reading
since July 2020 as some prospective buyers are experiencing sticker shock due
to higher construction costs. Policymakers need to find long-term solutions to
supply-chain issues.”
Meanwhile,
NAHB Chief Economist Robert Dietz said: “While the demographics and interest
for home buying remain solid, higher costs and material access issues have
resulted in lower levels of home building and even put a hold on some new home
sales. While these supply-side limitations are holding back the market, our
expectation is that production bottlenecks should ease over the coming months
and the market should return to more normal conditions.”